So the only thing that needed to be changed was the <url-pattern>? I.E. the "/*" needed to be added to the end of webdav.documents? I guess I should change that for ical, contacts, etc, huh?

yes to " /* " that will allow you to travel into the directories. Also your filespool must be accesable by the user running you tomcat instance. As far as ical and such go I would say no this would only apply for the documents._________________write quit bang

Than "Execute the command "postmap /etc/postfix/virtual" after changing the virtual
file, and execute the command "postfix reload" after changing the main.cf file"

works just like your alias file and newalises.

Taken from the VIRTUAL_README

Wouldn't something have to be added to the LDAP tree as well?

Again this will only allow you to send an email to user1@mydomain1.com and have it send to your "real" user at user1@mydomain.com .. It is like a virtual host alias thing. Not a true virtual domain.._________________write quit bang

Looking at you post I am not to sure what to tell you.. Your log shows that the ldap requests are going through fine so the only thing I think it could be is database grants / permissions.

How are you starting OX... I would reccomend starting each server in a differnt term and watch the logs..
/usr/local/open-xchange/bin/openexchange-sessiond
/usr/local/open-xchange/bin/openexchange-groupware
/usr/local/open-xchange/bin/openexchange-webmail

than also tail -f /var/log/messages
(for testing a have /var/log/messages as a catch all log file)
this will give you "real time error reporting" so to speak.. I think you will find an error in your groupware log if so post that.._________________write quit bang

Those are LDAP log entries, you'll want to post your other logs as init-zero says. The documents are stored in your local filesystem under a (pretty whacky) file system layout in the /usr/local/open-xchange directory. The entries, not the file itself, are stored in the database. All that LDAP is used for is for authentication.

You may want to look in your auth.log file as well and maybe check the permissions on your filespool. I've read in some of the other howto's that you have to do this, although I've never noticed it with mine.

Looking at you post I am not to sure what to tell you.. Your log shows that the ldap requests are going through fine so the only thing I think it could be is database grants / permissions.

How are you starting OX... I would reccomend starting each server in a differnt term and watch the logs..
/usr/local/open-xchange/bin/openexchange-sessiond
/usr/local/open-xchange/bin/openexchange-groupware
/usr/local/open-xchange/bin/openexchange-webmail

than also tail -f /var/log/messages
(for testing a have /var/log/messages as a catch all log file)
this will give you "real time error reporting" so to speak.. I think you will find an error in your groupware log if so post that..

The sessiond and webmail log files had nothing helpful in them. The only thing reported in the groupware log was:

I tried running the PostgreSQL postmaster in terminal mode (logged in as postgres and ran 'postmaster -i -D /var/lib/postgresql/data/') but got no joy. Also looked at the prg_documents_* tables but didn't see anything particularly out of place with them.

I've taken a close look at /usr/local/open-xchange/var/filespool. The directory is completely empty, and according to SuSE, it should be populated. I've made modifications to their script to populate the directory and I'll see if that remedies the problem._________________"If you design for the exceptions, the rules fall into place."

One thing to note if your are going to be using webdav stuff the filespool must also be accesible by the user running your tomcat instance. And I do suggest you mess with that I am super impressed. Works just like a local file system just with versioning _________________write quit bang

One thing to note if your are going to be using webdav stuff the filespool must also be accesible by the user running your tomcat instance. And I do suggest you mess with that I am super impressed. Works just like a local file system just with versioning

There's also talk on the General mailinglist about possibly integrating SAMBA with LDAP and the filespool. Would be done through what's called an OXtension. Sounds very promising.

On another note, there's talk on the OX forum about integrating an IM server (Jabber) into the mix as well. There are java clients that could be docked on the (right-side) panel.